The folks at online storage provider Backblaze have an interesting blog post which shows you how you can build your own 67 terabyte storage server for under $8000. Pretty impressive!
Update 12:30 PM: As Jeff points out, it’s not for everybody.
Extreme geekiness
There are 700 posts filed in X-Geek (this is page 47 of 70).
The folks at online storage provider Backblaze have an interesting blog post which shows you how you can build your own 67 terabyte storage server for under $8000. Pretty impressive!
Update 12:30 PM: As Jeff points out, it’s not for everybody.
I’ve been tinkering with Event Calendar 3, a great WordPress iCalendar server plugin so I can easily serve up important community events to my neighbors. Part of this is testing it with various calendar clients like Exchange. Since I don’t have Windows running anywhere in the house, I thought I’d try the next best thing: Kelly’s Mac with Microsoft Entourage 2004 installed.
Entourage suffers from Microsoft’s peculiar habit of putting all its eggs in one basket. All Kelly’s email, events, tasks, and contacts live in one big file called (wait for it!) “Database.” If anything happens to that one file, you’re screwed. Back to that in a moment.
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Our Roomba has been doing what I call a “wiggle walk” lately, where it waddles about a foot in one direction then turns around and waddles in the other direction. I contacted iRobot’s support and provided a video clip of our Roomba’s walk. The diagnosis from iRobot was a problem with the wheel sensor. They suggested giving it a thorough cleaning to make sure the internal sensor wasn’t being blocked by dust.
I “popped the hood” today and vacuumed our vacuum out. That’s when I noticed the root of the problem: the left wheel sensor switch didn’t look like the right. The switch was broken, the little arm that goes with the switch was missing. iRobot’s support department told me iRobot can’t send a replacement switch and that the only thing that can be done is to replace the Roomba.
I just bought a new battery for the Roomba and don’t want to junk it just for a little switch. I refuse to believe I have to put Roomba down like a horse with a broken leg. I figure one can’t own a robot without knowing how to fix it, so I’m thinking about how to either fix the switch or work around it. Since Roomba is used mostly on the first floor and has almost no chance of falling, I think I may safely bypass the switch. We’ll see!
Update 10 Feb 2010: I did wind up hardwiring the switch, which breathed more life into my robot friend at the risk of having it run off a cliff someday. Fortunately I only use Roomba on the ground floor. Success!
As the All Your Base video meme said, “main screen turn on!”
I got my MythTV frontend working with my HDTV again after a ridiculously tough set of issues to resolve. First, the PC in question is my old Thinkpad laptop and is barely functional to begin with. If you touch it ever so lightly, for instance, the display and keyboard will cease to function. I had to carefully position it through trial and error before I got it to keep its video alive.
Once that was done I was happy to see mplayer doing something on my big screen, only it wasn’t showing any video. GNOME would dutifully draw a border around where my video was supposed to be showing but all there was was an empty box. Instead, the ATI Radeon video driver was showing my video on the laptop screen – the booby-trapped one, remember? No good. No good at all.
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Today is Linux‘s 18th birthday. On August 26, 1991, Linus Torvalds announced Linux to the world:
Hello everybody out there using minix –
I’m doing a (free) operating system (just a hobby, won’t be big and professional like gnu) for 386(486) AT clones. This has been brewing since april, and is starting to get ready. I’d like any feedback on things people like/dislike in minix, as my OS resembles it somewhat (same physical layout of the file-system (due to practical reasons) among other things).
(h/t Warren Myers)
I wrote UNC-TV today to ask when their antenna upgrades would be completed. It turns out the job was done just this past Friday evening!
Here’s the word from Gary Coble, Transmitter Site Supervisor at UNC-TV:
At 7:19pm on Friday August 21 WUNC-TV Channel 4 began full power maximized operation. The operation is at 1 Million Watts on the top mounted main antenna. For those viewers using outside antennas please aim your antenna towards the transmitter site in Northern Chatham County, just Southwest of downtown Chapel Hill and rescan your converter box or digital TV tuner. Thank you for your patience and thank you for watching UNC-TV!
After rescanning my channels, I can report the signal is coming in better than ever. I’m glad to have my PBS back!
Three days ago yet another of our Bright Effects CFL bulbs dropped dead. This time I saw its spectacular death, as light flickered brilliantly through the dying bulb. Then there was an alarming smell that I soon recognized: the smell of a fried capacitor.
Capacitors have long been a problem in my electronics. I bought a video camera back in the 1980s with capacitors inside that were allegedly counterfeit. Just a few years into its life the camera’s electronics literally melted off the circuit board, rendering it useless. Most of my other CFLs died due to bad ballast electronics, too. I haven’t pried my dead bulbs open yet to check but it wouldn’t surprise me of all of them didn’t meet their maker due to bad capacitors (at least the one in February did).
One day, I hope a bulb manufacturer will create a replaceable ballast module like I’ve suggested.
Looks like my love affair with Net10 has taken a turn for the worse.
I decided to upgrade my Motorola V171 Net10 phone to a newer Motorola W377g. I’ve entered quite a few numbers into the ancient V171 and rather than punching in all of these numbers into my new phone I was looking forward to uploading my contacts into it using the phone’s USB port.
Imagine my disappointment when I found mention on various Internet forums that Net10 has deliberately crippled this functionality. I found it to be the case myself when my connection software timed out when connecting to the phone.
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Remember how I was laughing at the thought of North Korea launching a cyber-attack? That was before I found out reclusive leader Kim Jong-il is an Internet expert. Maybe the North Korean equivalent to Vint Cerf or something, for all I know.
Anyway, could today’s brief denial of service attack on Twitter be the work of Dear Leader? Makes me wonder. A denial of service attack doesn’t need much initial bandwidth to get started, provided there’s a large farm of zombie hosts from which to attack.
I’ve heard good reports of Netflix’s “Watch Instantly” streaming movies but hadn’t experienced it until yesterday. I came home from work to find Kelly and the kids crowded around her laptop, watching Disney’s Chitty Chitty Bang Bang.
Color me impressed! It looked like they were watching a DVD, the picture quality was so good. And this was over our home wireless network. There were no skips or any visible glitches.
We’d had the ability to stream these movies courtesy of our Netflix subscription for quite some time now but hadn’t gotten to installing the Microsoft Silverlight software onto Kelly’s Mac until now.
Next up, a dedicated Roku player so we can stream movies to our big TV!